Thursday, September 8, 2011

A New Life for My Old Cane Chair

It all started with this old chair I found at Habitat Restore. Well, you know how sometimes you have too many unfinished projects? That's me, so I kept on walking. I bought some small thing but kept thinking about the chair. It was $10. As I was getting in my car I realized I really wanted this chair. The fabric was in bad shape but the chair itself was in good shape. I bought this lovely in May and after tossing around lots of color and fabric ideas around in my head I finally "recreated" it this month.

There were so many fabrics and colors I loved but in the end it had to be something that could work with the cane siding. There was a polka dot fabric and a Chevron one that I adored but, it wasn't happening - too much pattern and I don't want anyone getting dizzy looking at my chair! So... I decided to use the Waverly Button Blooms fabric I bought earlier and love so much. It is pictured with the cotton clothes line I found cheap at Walmart to make cording for the chair.

Then on to the paint. With this fabric there were several choices. I chose blue and was delighted to see that Valspar makes Waverly Fabric inspired paint. I bought a $3 sample bottle of Blue Sail - it was all I needed and still have a bit left for a smaller project. Amazing.

I started by turning the chair over and removing the screws holding the seat in place. I'm not quite sure why but.............

There was a board attached to another board that had a large cut out area. Made no sense to me and if any of you out there have an explanation for this I would LOVE to hear from you. Needless to say, all the old foam was tossed

And I didn't remove this tag. Even though it is pretty scary looking!

Next up was painting this baby. (I won't bore you with removing the old fabric or the gazillion staples that had to be removed. :) What a job that was!)

Once the chair was ready I used Rustoleum 2X Satin Heirloom White as a primer just because I had it on hand. Then painted the Valspar Blue Sail onto my chair. One coat was pretty much all it needed except for a few spots.

This picture (above) is with the pattern I made using posterboard for the back panels.

Now for the re-upholstery part For most projects I use a one inch wide ruler to cut fabric strips on the bias (that means you cut diagonally across the fabric.) It allows the cording to be more flexible.

Here you see how to sew the cording pieces together ( front sides facing ) Then iron the seam open.

Fold over and use your zipper foot (if you have one) to sew the fabric tight around the cord.

Usually, you would want to save the original piece to use as your pattern, but this old fabric fell apart and was pretty yucky. So, I started from scratch.

I placed the bottom board onto the back of my fabric. Then I drew around the board allowing 1" extra all around for the seam allowance. The side and front pieces were 3" deep so I cut out one long strip 5" wide and 54" long. With the seat fabric facing up I pinned the cording (raw edges matching) and the side piece (facing down.) Stitched all around the seat with the zipper foot to get a tight fit.

For the cushion, I used the old seat board to trace a pattern onto new 3" deep foam and some batting.

I placed the foam on the board then added some batting to the top. I placed the finished cover over it and started stapling all around the base.

Now, on to the back of the chair. I had traced a pattern onto some poster board for the back fabric panels. I cut out 2 pieces for the front and back. I pinned the back with the right side facing out

Then I stapled around the edges.

Placed a thin layer of batting over the back piece and then two strips of jute cut to size for added strength. I secured this with a few more staples.

Next layer was a 1" deep piece of foam cut to fit inside the layers. Another thin layer of batting over that and a few more staples.

For the seat back cording I cut more bias strips but, instead of sewing this I used fabric glue. I folded over one edge and tucked the raw edge under the folded one. Pinned it to some cork on top of wax paper to dry.

For the finished back I took the other fabric piece and began tucking in the raw edge at the top and sides. And more stapling again as you can (hopefully) see in this picture. Then I used the fabric glue to attach the cording to the back. I did use straight pins to hold this in place until it was dry.

Then I put the seat in place and secured with screws. It is far from perfect but I am happy with my first attempt at recovering a chair! Hope you enjoyed this and have a wonderful creative week!

I absolutely love it! ALl of these sewing posts everyone has make me so jealous. I need to learn how to sew immediately.I tried once before, but I don't know if I was off that day or what, but I could not concentrate or have patience with it at all.

Ohh my goodness I LOVE your up-cycle! I love the color, I love the fabric and I love what a great job you did putting everything together! I am drooling, that is for sure! Thank you SO much for inspiring me---I have a chair sitting out in my garage that I have been wanting to play with! :o) Ohh and thank you SO much for linking up! I am your new adoring fan and follower too!Jaime from Crafty Scrappy Happy

Mimi, your chair turned out so cute! I have one exactly like this. I haven't done anything with it because the upholstery part is intimidating me! You inspired me. Thanks for sharing your post. www.projectqueen.org

That chair looks amazing! You did a great job...I've been trying to do my first "real" chair and I had to stop half way to catch my breath so I didn't go crazy...I have yet to get back to it. It has cording and I've never done that before so I'm putting it off. Thanks for the tutorial...I need to read through it another half dozen times for it to gel in my brain! :)

I have a similar chair that is a rocker and I bought it to rock first child who is now 35 years old. A make over like yours is exactly what that chair needs. I love the color and the fabrics you used. Thanks for sharing the step by step process.

Wow! This is such a beautiful transformation. Even though you gave good tutorial, it looks a little intimidating...and I know how to sew! But you've given me a starting point and now I want to do an upholstery project.

holy cow. This is a true trash to treasure project. This was the first link I looked at from our link party last week (upon arriving back to the states from vacation). I showed Mr. Woodsy and he was in shock. I featured this project on Sew Woodsy today! :)

wow! great job. thanks for sharing i have a chair exactly the same but beside the gazillion staples that are taking me forever to pull out and the fact I cant choose a fabric, im soooo intimidated to do this project! thanks for the inspiration!

Super lovely.. I found ya per Motivate me Monday and this totally motivates me to COOK.. : )) Lovely blog.. I'm Marilyn from http://theartsygirlconnection.blogspot.com and i'm following ya officially with SMILES.. Hoping you can stop by sometime and return the follow/simply say hello.. Thanks & have a great week..

I saw a chair just like this at the thrift store the other day for $12. I was going to buy it but couldn't fit it my car with all the other things I grabbed. Now that I see your tutorial, I totally wish I bought it!! :(

New follower!Stop by and visit us @ http://everything-underthemoon.blogspot.com

Thanks for linking to a Round Tuit! Remember the voting is now open – if you want to head over and vote for your project! The most voted link will get a full post feature/promotion next week!Hope you have a great week!Jill @ Creating my way to Success Round Tuit 67 voting

About Me

Hey to all and thank you for being here!
I am a Mom of four wonderful {grown} children, age 21 to 26. I call my blog messy mimi because I love it when I am elbow deep in paint, batter, or fabric. Love creative messiness
When I get the creative buzz going there is no stopping me! Living a blessed life one moment at a time Hope you enjoy my stuff!